Asus has let slip the technical specifications and launch date of its now confirmed e-book viewer – the DR-570.
Equipped with a 5.7in OLED “high-brightness” colour display, the DR-570 will also support Adobe Flash and either Wi-Fi or 3G wireless connections – but not both.
Asus_DR750 Asus' DR-570 e-book viewer
Source: Sunday …

COMMENTS

Readability/eye strain

I always thought that the main advantage of ebook readers over reading books on something like a monitor was the way that e-ink allowed users to read for a long time without eye strain etc. What's the point of it running for 122 hours if you get a headache after a couple of them?

I hope the e-book reader is not going to hijacked by firms making 'tablets' of the same format as current ebook readers but not using the eye friendly displays that are, at the moment, one of the main unique selling points of e-book readers?

Moving towards mimicking a real book

I have a Sony ebook which is great for commuter reading. I like the long battery life and how easy the display is on the eyes. Colour would be nice, as would the ability to enlarge some pictures and diagrams in PDF ebooks.

The Asus spec looks good, the battery life in particular, especially as it seems to be driving 2 screens. Hopefully the display is as gentle on the eye as e-ink.

Not sure about the 2 pages, I quite like getting my ebook screen into a comfortable position then each page is displayed in turn. 2 sided page printing is only to save paper, so 2 separate ebook pages seems to be over the top, but may have uses that I have not thought of. (Joined pages would be better.)